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WSWS : News
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Philippines: Fatal game-show stampedean exploitation
of social despair
By Fergus Michaels
16 February 2006
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The fatal crowd stampede that occurred on February 4 at the
entrance to the PhilSports sporting arena in Pasig City, Manila,
reveals the poverty and desperation afflicting workers in the
Philippines.
The stampede resulted in the loss of 74 lives, with 627 injured.
Most of the victims were elderly women who were crushed against
a steel gate on the stadiums sloped entrance drive, trampled
underfoot, or crushed under other bodies as the crowd surged forward
to get a seat in the stadium. One child was killed.
Estimates of the crowd vary between 25,000 and 35,000. The
maximum capacity of the stadium, formerly known as ULTRA, was
19,000. For days leading up to the tragedy, a large crowd had
amassed outside the arena to gain admittance to the first year
anniversary production of the TV game show Wowowee.
Wowowee is famous for its prize giveaways, and
is very popular in the Philippines, where it is shown six days
a week at midday. For this special anniversary show, prizes included
cash of up to P1 million ($19,230), a car, taxis, and a house
with land.
These are huge prizes in a country where 40 percent of the
population live on less than $2 per day. Data from the World
Health Organisation give some insight into the poverty and
social inequality that afflict millions of Filipinos. According
to its latest official data, in 2003, about 3.97 million
families ... were living below the poverty line, in a country
where the annual per capita poverty threshold reached P12
267 (US$ 220.64) in 2003, up by 7.1 percent compared with the
2000 level of P11 451 (US$ 205.96). The World
Bank cites 30 percent of the population living below the poverty
line.
Wowowee, produced by ABS-CBN, is pitched toward
the most poor and desperate sections of the Philippine populace.
According to Agence France-Presse, Wowowee host Willie
Revillame stated after the stampede that he had made it
a point to stage the game shows at other provincial centers several
times during the past year.... We would pick places where the
poor are hard-up.
This is a program that intends to help Filipinos, especially
the poor, he claimed. In reality the show is based on the
exploitation of the emotional responses of impoverished people,
where chances of winning a prize are miniscule.
The people outside the PhilSports arena on Saturday were drawn
from poor communities in Manila and more distant provinces. Susan
Doblin told Reuters, Were very poor. I waited
for days outside to try our luck. This is a rare chance for us
to win a million pesos.
The Manila Times quotes Zenaida Campanero, explaining,
We also did not have sleep, many had not slept for days,
and with only biscuits to eat and water. A man in his 20s
told the Observer, My mother came here hoping
to win a prize,... holding her dead hand and sobbing.
Such is the level of desperation that police chief Vidal Querol
explained, The dead were lined up on the streets, but people
still did not want to go home. It was bizarre. They persisted
in entering the PhilSports Arena and demanded that the show go
on. Many people were still waiting for tickets although bodies
were piling up. According to Querol, even after dead bodies
lay strewn on the entrance road, People stepped over the
bodies and continued to make their way into the stadium.
The stampede
Accounts differ as to how the stampede itself actually developed.
Campanero, a survivor, told the Manila Times, As
soon as the distribution of tickets for the show began, many started
to push themselves to the front. She said there was no systematic
queue.
Other witnesses said that the stampede began when a barrier
collapsed as people were being let into the stadium, causing the
guards to panic and shut the gate whilst the crowd continued to
press forward. According to the ABS-CBNs Interactive
site, Rene Luspo, head of security for ABS-CBN, said those at
the back of the queue began to push forward after it became apparent
that they would be denied access to the arena.
The Department of the Interior and Local Governments
(DILG) ULTRA task force, a fact-finding body established immediately
after the stampede, submitted a summary of its findings to the
Department of Justice. According to the Manila Times, the
report found that at 4 a.m. the guards at the PhilSports arena
had announced that the gate would be opened at 6 a.m., but that
not everybody would be allowed entry. Then at 6 a.m., Mel Feliciano,
associate producer of Wowowee, announced that the
first 300 people in line would be given tickets which would enable
them, if selected, to take part in the Pera o Bayong
(cash or basket) portion of the show, giving them the chance to
win prizes from P10,000 to P50,000. What transpired next, according
to the DILG report, is reported in the Philippine Daily Inquirer:
The announcement subsequently incited the people who
were outside the official queue ... to push their way into the
already jam-packed queue, hoping that they could squeeze in among
the first 300...
At this point, the networks staff closed the gates,
hoping to control the sudden deluge of people wanting to be the
first 300 in line...
Whether by the pressure exerted on the gate itself or
whether the guards finally relented to open the gate again, when
the gate was flung open, the crowd surged forward with tremendous
speed and force.
Coupled with the steep decline and the uneven surface
of the road in the LRP gate (which is normally used only for vehicular
traffic), this eventually caused those in front of the onrushing
mob to stumble and fall, [which] culminated in the stampede that
caused the majority of the deaths and injuries.
Vidal Querol commented, The slope was so steep that when
one person stumbled, they fell like dominoes.
The February 4 tragedy was preventable and even predictable.
An article by John J. Fruin, PhD., P.E., titled The
Causes and Prevention of Crowd Disasters, reads as a
severe indictment of those responsible for organizing Saturdays
event. It characterizes a typical mass craze like
that which occurred as arising when a competitive rush to
obtain some highly valued objective, such as viewing an
event or person, or gaining a privileged seat in a stadium, is
elicited through intensive promot(ion). Despite the
serious dangers associated with large crowds, Fruin asserts, Most
major crowd disasters can be prevented by simple crowd management
strategies. The primary crowd management objectives are the avoidance
of critical crowd densities and the triggering of rapid group
movement.
This is precisely the opposite of what the Wowowee
event organizers achieved.
Both ABS-CBN and the Philippine government have attempted to
absolve themselves of responsibility for the stampede. The DILG
taskforce has criticized ABS-CBN for the lack of coordination
between its security guards, PhilSports security, and the local
police. In particular, it severely criticized the absence of a
worked-out contingency plan for the huge crowd the network expected
to attend, and has recommended the Department Of Justice find
at least four ABS-CBN executives and organisers legally accountable.
The report said that the crowd were exploited, manipulated
and treated like animals.... The decision or act of offering so
few tickets to so many people can be likened to throwing a small
slice of meat to a hungry pack of wolves and this triggered the
stampede.
ABS-CBN has seized upon this comment, calling for an independent
investigation. It claims there are several inaccuracies
in the report released by the ULTRA taskforce. Currently under
dispute is the responsibility of the local police and Pasig City
mayors office. The Philippine Daily Inquirer claims
ABS-CBN is offering financial assistance to some victims in return
for a waiver against legal action against the network.
By concentrating virtually exclusively on the question of immediate
legal responsibility for the stampede, the Philippine government
has attempted to obscure its principal, social cause. The recommendations
it gave to the department of justice pertain to basic management,
safety and emergency response and operational questions and do
not once mention the most salient factorthe poverty of those
in the crowd, which was the basis for their attendance and extreme
anxiety in the lead-up to the stampede.
This event, which so graphically exposes the real social conditions
faced by masses of the Philippine population, is a damning indictment
of the government and the entire ruling elite. That Philippines
President Gloria Arroyo is well aware of this is clearly indicated
in her public response to the stampede. She called for an acknowledgement
of the compelling circumstances that led to this tragedy
and a commitment to end despair and raise hope, by joining
hands and working together to fight abject poverty. She
acknowledged that the extent and implications of this tragedy
have struck the whole nation, but described the stampede
as a meaningless tragedy.
The presidents office assiduously sought to downplay
the direct link between the policies of the government and the
state of Philippine society made by some political figures and
media commentators. Presidential spokesman Ignacio R. Bunye chastised
those who continue to twist the tragedy in Ultra to poison
the minds of the people, before stating that the continuing
strengthening of the peso did not happen by itself. It is fed
by good economic fundamentals and confidence in the national leadership.
See Also:
A year after the Hacienda
Luisita massacre in the Philippinesno one charged
[18 January 2006]
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